The cabin in which I found myself
was small and rather untidy. A youngish man with
flaxen hair, a bristly straw-coloured moustache, and
a dropping nether lip, was sitting and holding my wrist.
For a minute we stared at each other without speaking.
He had watery grey eyes, oddly void of expression.
Then just overhead came a sound like an iron bedstead
being knocked about, and the low angry growling of
some large animal. At the same time the man spoke.
He repeated his question,—“How do
you feel now?”
I think I said I felt all right.
I could not recollect how I had got there.
He must have seen the question in my face, for my
voice was inaccessible to me.
“You were picked up in a boat,
starving. The name on the boat was the ‘Lady
Vain,’ and there were spots of blood on the gunwale.”
At the same time my eye caught my
hand, so thin that it looked like a dirty skin-purse
full of loose bones, and all the business of the boat
came back to me.
“Have some of this,” said
he, and gave me a dose of some scarlet stuff, iced.
It tasted like blood, and made me feel stronger.
“You were in luck,” said
he, “to get picked up by a ship with a medical
man aboard.” He spoke with a slobbering
articulation, with the ghost of a lisp.
“What ship is this?”
I said slowly, hoarse from my long silence.
“It’s a little trader
from Arica and Callao. I never asked where she
came from in the beginning,—out of the land
of born fools, I guess. I’m a passenger
myself, from Arica. The silly ass who owns her,—he’s
captain too, named Davies,—he’s lost
his certificate, or something. You know the kind
of man,—calls the thing the ‘Ipecacuanha,’
of all silly, infernal names; though when there’s
much of a sea without any wind, she certainly acts
according.”
(Then the noise overhead began again,
a snarling growl and the voice of a human being together.
Then another voice, telling some “Heaven-forsaken
idiot” to desist.)
“You were nearly dead,”
said my interlocutor. “It was a very near
thing, indeed. But I’ve put some stuff
into you now. Notice your arm’s sore?
Injections. You’ve been insensible for
nearly thirty hours.”
I thought slowly. (I was distracted
now by the yelping of a number of dogs.) “Am
I eligible for solid food?” I asked.
“Thanks to me,” he said.
“Even now the mutton is boiling.”
“Yes,” I said with assurance; “I
could eat some mutton.”
“But,” said he with a
momentary hesitation, “you know I’m dying
to hear of how you came to be alone in that boat.
Damn that howling!” I thought I detected a
certain suspicion in his eyes.
He suddenly left the cabin, and I
heard him in violent controversy with some one, who
seemed to me to talk gibberish in response to him.
The matter sounded as though it ended in blows, but
in that I thought my ears were mistaken. Then
he shouted at the dogs, and returned to the cabin.
“Well?” said he in the
doorway. “You were just beginning to tell
me.”
I told him my name, Edward Prendick,
and how I had taken to Natural History as a relief
from the dulness of my comfortable independence.
He seemed interested in this.
“I’ve done some science myself.
I did my Biology at University College,—getting
out the ovary of the earthworm and the radula of the
snail, and all that. Lord! It’s ten
years ago. But go on! go on! tell me about the
boat.”
He was evidently satisfied with the
frankness of my story, which I told in concise sentences
enough, for I felt horribly weak; and when it was
finished he reverted at once to the topic of Natural
History and his own biological studies. He began
to question me closely about Tottenham Court Road
and Gower Street. “Is Caplatzi still flourishing?
What a shop that was!” He had evidently been
a very ordinary medical student, and drifted incontinently
to the topic of the music halls. He told me
some anecdotes.
“Left it all,” he said,
“ten years ago. How jolly it all used to
be! But I made a young ass of myself,—played
myself out before I was twenty-one. I daresay
it’s all different now. But I must look
up that ass of a cook, and see what he’s done
to your mutton.”
The growling overhead was renewed,
so suddenly and with so much savage anger that it
startled me. “What’s that?”
I called after him, but the door had closed.
He came back again with the boiled mutton, and I
was so excited by the appetising smell of it that I
forgot the noise of the beast that had troubled me.
After a day of alternate sleep and
feeding I was so far recovered as to be able to get
from my bunk to the scuttle, and see the green seas
trying to keep pace with us. I judged the schooner
was running before the wind. Montgomery—that
was the name of the flaxen-haired man—came
in again as I stood there, and I asked him for some
clothes. He lent me some duck things of his own,
for those I had worn in the boat had been thrown overboard.
They were rather loose for me, for he was large and
long in his limbs. He told me casually that the
captain was three-parts drunk in his own cabin.
As I assumed the clothes, I began asking him some
questions about the destination of the ship.
He said the ship was bound to Hawaii, but that it had
to land him first.
“Where?” said I.
“It’s an island, where
I live. So far as I know, it hasn’t got
a name.”
He stared at me with his nether lip
dropping, and looked so wilfully stupid of a sudden
that it came into my head that he desired to avoid
my questions. I had the discretion to ask no
more.